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The authors examine how health governance is being transformed amid globalization, characterized by the emergence of new actors and institutions, and the interplay of competing ideas about global health. They explore how this has affected the governance of specific health issues, such as HIV/AIDS, pandemic influenza, tobacco control and access to medicines, and how it relates to global governance more broadly. Adopting a multi-layer perspective on global health governance, the authors suggest how global health governance might move forward more effectively.

From the Publisher

The authors examine how health governance is being transformed amid globalization, characterized by the emergence of new actors and institutions, and the interplay of competing ideas about global health. They explore how this has affected the governance of specific health issues, such as HIV/AIDS, pandemic influenza, tobacco control and access to medicines, and how it relates to global governance more broadly. Adopting a multi-layer perspective on global health governance, the authors suggest how global health governance might move forward more effectively.

About the Author

Colin McInnes is Director of the Centre for Health and International Relations (CHAIR) at Aberystwyth University, UK and UNESCO Professor of HIV/AIDS, Education and Health Security in Africa. He has published widely on the international politics of global health and has advised governments, international organisations and civil society. Adam Kamradt-Scott is Senior Lecturer in the Centre for International Security Studies, Department of Government and International Relations, University of Sidney, Australia. Adam has previously worked as a health professional, political adviser and public servant in Australia and has published a number of articles and book chapters on pandemic preparedness and health security. Kelley Lee is Professor of Global Health Policy in the Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Canada and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK. Her research and teaching focuses on the impacts of globalisation on communicable and non-communicable diseases, and the implications for global governance. Anne Roemer-Mahler is a Lecturer in International Relations and a Fellow at the Centre for Global Health Policy at the University of Sussex, UK. Her work focuses on the role of pharmaceutical companies from India in access to medicines and vaccines. Simon Rushton is a Faculty Research Fellow in the Department of Politics at the University of Sheffield, UK. He has written widely on the global politics of health, especially international responses to